Assigstdr of one-half to eric t



G. A. LEE.

OIL BURNER.

APPLICATiON FILED FEB. 13, 191v Patented Aug. 15, 1916.

m wwr convenient to construct the GUSSIE a. ten,- or omana; NEBRASKA, Assienon or one- Henr To euro '1'. JOHNSON,

- OE'OMAHA, NEBRASKA.

' OIL-BURNER.

Specification of as mm; Patented Aug. 15, tutti. V

7 Application filed February 13.1915. ,seiialnbsaese. w

1b all *whom it may concern: I

Be it known that L'Gussm A. LEE, a citizen of the UnitedStates, residing at Omaha, in the county of Douglas and the State of Nebraska, have invented a new and useful Improvement in Oil-Burners, of which the following'is a specification. 4 I

This invention'relates to'an oil burner adapted to be fitted into stoves orfurnaces, and the invention relates especially to the manner of feeding the oilto the burner and I admitting air thereto.

The inventionconsists in the novel featuresv of construction hereinafter described,

pointed out in the claim and shown in the Figure 1 's a vertical sectional burner being shown-in position; Fig. 2 is a sectiononthe line 2-2 of Fig. 1. I Fig. 3 is a section on the line 3+3 of Fig.1.

In the drawings 1" designates a stove or furnace having the usual pipe 2 for carrying oil the products of combustion, and a clean out. or draft door 3. v

. For the usual grate l-substitutea horizontal partition twhich supports a drip pan 5;

Thetwo might be integral but it is more gartition and pan separately as shown. T epan has a central sleeve which opens downwardly through the bottom of the pan, and reg sterswith asuitable opening in the partition 4-, and opens upwardly beneath a burner cap 7. The cap-has inwardly and 'downwardly extending spaced lugs 8, suitably notched to engage the top 'of the sleeve 6."

Bymeans of this construction the-burner is detachably held supported above the' sleeve. Air pipes 9 are arranged in the form'of an arch over the burner, dischargmg downwardly on the same through'a common discharge opening 10, and comm'unieat-. ing at their lower ends with the spacebelow the partition.

' Running into one side of the arch, that is through one of the pipes forming it, is

an oil supply pipe 11, which leads to a discharge nozzle 12 arranged in :the centerofi through theopening 10. hThepipe 11 is provided with a suitable valve l3. The oil .the archand dischargingdownwardly drops upon the burner cap 7 and air is fed upwardly through the sleeve -6 and around.

the cap'and also discharged downwardly through the opening 10, the air supply being drawn from the lower'portion of the stove.

The oil supply is regulated by'the valve 13, and-the air and draft by means of-the door 3 and the usual slide 3 carried thereby.

. The sleeve 6 forms acentrally arranged air tube. y

-' What I claim is:

In an oil burner, a

downwardly through the bottom of the pan, asenrii'sphe'rical burner cap supported on drip panpan air tube 7' centrally carried by the pan and openingthe upper end ofsaid tube and partially in:

closing the same, the tube opening upwardly beneath said cap, an oil supply pipe adapted to disehargevertically upon the top of the cap, and an air supply pipe within which said oil pipe is arranged; Y GUSSIE A. LEE.

Witnesses:

E. S. Vl lnionun, L. ZA'BHA. 

